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The Art & Science of Hang-out-ology:
David Amram in Conversation with Cliff Pearson

Lobby Bar at the Washington Square Hotel 103 Waverly Place, New York, NY, United States

David Amram, “Renaissance Man of American Music” and real-life Zelig, is now in his sixth year as Artist Emeritus of The Village Trip. He is the spirit of the festival, and a link to more than a half-century of fabled Village history. Indeed, David has lived much of it—hanging out with the Abstract Expressionists who changed the course of art, jamming with Parker, Monk and Mingus who changed the course of jazz, and composing for the great Joe Papp, who changed the course of theater.

$20

A Parting Glass: Dan Milner, Mick Moloney and Irish Music in Greenwich Village

The Bitter End 147 Bleecker Street, New York, NY, United States

Our memorial concert honors Dan Milner and Mick Moloney--performers, professors, and impresarios who brought great Irish music to settings as varied as the Eagle Tavern on West 14th Street and classrooms at New York University. Performers include Bonnie Milner, Daniel Neely, their friends, and members of the Washington Square Harp and Shamrock Orchestra.

$25 – $30

East Village Underground: Two Centuries of Creativity and Rebellion, Walking Tour

Ottendorfer Library 135 Second Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Join Marc Catapano and uncover the dynamic history of NYC's East Village and its famous underground movements. Explore its radical political past, its avant-garde art, and groundbreaking jazz, rock, and punk scenes. Visit iconic sites like CBGB’s, St Mark’s Place, and Tompkins Square Park, and revel in the area's extraordinary cultural legacy.

$30 – $35

Go Tell It On the Mountain: James Baldwin in Words and Music

Judson Memorial Church 55 Washington Square South, New York, NY, United States

Almost 40 years after his death, the words of James Baldwin are ever more resonant, speaking powerfully to us about culture, faith, race, justice, and identity. This celebration of Baldwin’s centennial honors his remarkable legacy with readings directed by actor and playwright Daniel Carlton, plus performances of the jazz, blues and gospel Baldwin listened to as he wrote, as well as new music by Julian Hornik and Nehemiah Luckett inspired by the novels Giovanni’s Room and Another Country.

$25.00

The Music of the West Village from Dylan to Springsteen and Beyond, Walking Tour

1 West 4th Street at the corner of Mercer and W 4th Street 1 West 4th Street, New York, NY, United States

Join Ann McDermott and visit the venues and hear the stories of Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, two of the most prolific and popular artists of our times. Explore the sites of the dimly lit Greenwich Village clubs, such as The Gaslight Café and Gerde’s Folk City, from where they started out.

$30 – $35

Donald Judd Home and Studio, Guided Tour

101 Spring Street 101 Spring Street, New York, NY, United States

One of the most significant artists of the 20th century, Donald Judd challenged boundaries and definitions in the worlds of art, architecture, and design. Renovated in 2013 by Architecture Research Office (ARO), 101 Spring Street tells the story of Judd’s ideas and presents his work as he dictated it should be when he lived and worked there. Adam Yarinsky, a founding principal at ARO, will lead the tour along with a guide from the Judd Foundation.

$17.50 – $32.50

Rabble Rousers: Frances Goldin and the Fight for Cooper Square

Village East by Angelika 189 Second Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Film screening at the Architecture & Design Film Festival. Directed by Kelly Anderson, Kathryn Barnier, and Ryan Joseph, this documentary film chronicles a trailblazing housing organizer and her diverse working-class neighbors as they fight Robert Moses, the real estate industry, and five mayors to create the first Community Land Trust in New York City—an oasis of permanent low-income housing in the heart of the rapidly gentrifying Lower East Side.

$13.64 – $17.84

Stand Up & Be Counted! The Village Trip Comedy Night

The Grisly Pear 107 Macdougal Street, New York, NY, United States

A great night of comedy featuring some of the best popular and up-and-coming comic talents in the New York area.

$20

Identity, Gender & Cockette Sexual Anarchy
An Evening of Glamour, Wild Tales, Photos & Films with Cockette Fayette Hauser

The Center 208 West 13th Street (Room 301), NY, United States

Fayette Hauser is a founding member of The Cockettes, performing in San Francisco from 1969 to 1972. In a rare Village performance, Fayette will reflect on the Cockette years with a talk and slideshow that will evoke nostalgia in those who were there and envy in those who missed out. She will also introduce two rarely seen films starring The Cockettes.

$25

Greenwich Village at the turn of the 20th Century, Walking Tour

Christopher Park Corner of Christopher & West 4th Streets, New York, NY, United States

Discover Greenwich Village in the early 20th century, America’s first great Bohemian center. In the company of Marc Catapano, visit landmarks like the Provincetown Playhouse, where Eugene O’Neill revolutionized theater, the Whitney Studio Club, home to the Ashcan School Painters, and the Washington Square Park Arch, where on January 23, 1917 Village Bohemians proclaimed the Free and Independent Republic of Greenwich Village.

$30 – $35

From the Courtyard

St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United States

“Art preserves life in a very special way. Our memories die with us, but art preserves the values and experiences” – Undine Smith Moore

From the Courtyard first recreates the sounds of an East Village tenement courtyard, shared by multicultural immigrant families, then moves into the concert hall to hear how the rich legacy of folk music inspired later generations of composers. The concert features a premiere by Clarice Assad.
Presented in cooperation with the Tenement Museum.

$20 – $30

Bringing It All Back Home to Washington Square

Garibaldi Plaza Washington Square Park, New York, NY, United States

The Village Trip’s signature free concert in Washington Square Park this year celebrates girl power and sister acts! We are thrilled to welcome Tish and Snooky, glam punk rock legends of the Lower East Side; Janie Barnett, acclaimed as both session singer and Americana soloist; and BETTY, the indie rock trio who are Gloria Steinem’s favorite band. A program that’s as diverse as the Village itself.

Free

World Central Kitchen Fundraiser

St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United States

World Central Kitchen is first to the frontlines, providing meals in response to humanitarian, climate, and community crises. We, as artists, support this non-profit organization with our music and poetry, helping to raise awareness and money for their worthy cause by organizing this event and inviting everyone to join us in supporting World Central Kitchen. 
Presented by Composers Concordance in association with The Village Trip.

$25 – $30

Old-Fashioned Coffee House Night: David Roth and a Singer-Songwriter Showcase

Assembly Hall, Judson Memorial Church 239 Thompson Street, New York, NY, United States

Get into a 1960s groove as Peoples' Voice Café takes you back to the era of subterranean Greenwich Village coffee houses. No microphones, no amps, no speakers and of course no live-streaming. Just acoustic instruments and natural voices with chairs arranged in a circle and the lights low. Home-made music as it was and still can be.

Free – $20

Person Place Thing podcast with Randy Cohen and Jamie Bernstein

Greenwich House Music School 46 Barrow Street, New York, NY, United States

A conversation between author-narrator-filmmaker-broadcaster Jamie Bernstein & Randy Cohen, host Person Place Thing. Music from soprano Amy Burton & John Musto.

$25

Person Place Thing podcast with Randy Cohen and Janis Siegel

La Lanterna di Vittorio 129 MacDougal Street, New York, NY, United States

Jazz vocalist Janis Siegel in conversation with Randy Cohen about her five-decade career with The Manhattan Transfer. Accompanied by guitarist Sean Harkness.

$25

The East Village, The Music and the Explosions of the 1960s, ‘70s and ‘80s, Walking Tour

St Mark’s in the Bowery 131 East 10th Street, New York, NY, United States

The edgy East Village has long led the way in cultural revolutions. This tour begins at the first place where Patti Smith read poetry, beginning the journey that led to her breakthrough. Why did she and so many creatives come here? Follow Ann McDermott on a stroll back through East Village music venues of the 1960s and ‘70s and learn about the performing artists who helped shape our culture.

$25 – $30

Village Voices: With James Martin, baritone & Lynn Raley, piano
World Premières of New Work by David Amram, Carman Moore & Maria Thompson Corley

St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United States

The world première of Five American Voices, a song cycle by David Amram, “the renaissance man of American music” and Artist Emeritus of The Village Trip. The work “reflects the diverse voices of our cultural mosaic” and features settings of writings by Carolyn Cassady, Leslie Marmon Silko, Ron Whitehead, Ted Joans, and Tom Piazza. The piece was commissioned by the Roger Shapiro Fund for The Village Trip and will be performed by baritone James C Martin, and pianist Lynn Raley.

$25 – $30

Classical Cool! Kids’ Concert hosted by Nina Bernstein Simmons

St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United States

Taking a leaf from the Maestro’s inspirational Young People’s Concerts, this family concert celebrates the legacy of conductor, composer and educator Leonard Bernstein and also honors the 150th anniversary of the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA). Classical Cool! includes works by Bernstein and Saint-Saëns’ whimsical family favorite Carnival of the Animals, performed by The Village Trip Festival Orchestra conducted by Victoria Bond and with narration by Nina Bernstein Simmons.

$20 – $35

Beat Generation: Live Poetry, Walking Tour

Village Voice 36 Cooper Square, New York, NY, United States

An unmissable tour with authentic Beat poets from the Bowery! You'll visit iconic Beat Generation locations and hear live poetry recited and sung. If you love the Beat Generation and want to truly experience its vibe, to travel back in time and soak up the Beats' energy and passion for life – to get in the groove – then Marcos de la Fuente and Annalisa Marí Pegrum will take you there.
This tour is offered in both English and Spanish.

$30 – $35

Call to Action

Westbeth: Community Room 155 Bank Street, New York, NY, United States

Open Stage and Community Gathering at Westbeth home to the arts. Calling all Poets, Musicians and Artists of All Disciplines!
Show Up! and Sign Up!

Free

The Peoples’ Voice Café: Terry Kitchen & Erin Ash Sullivan

Assembly Hall, Judson Memorial Church 239 Thompson Street, New York, NY, United States

Socially conscious New England singer-songwriters Terry Kitchen and Erin Ash Sullivan make their way downtown to Greenwich Village to perform at the historic Peoples’ Voice Cafe. Terry and Erin will each play a 55-minute set.

Free – $20

My Name is New York: A Walking Tour Through Woody Guthrie’s Village with Anna Canoni & Cole Quest

70 East 12th Street New York, NY, United States

Join Woody’s grandchildren, Anna Canoni, President of Woody Guthrie Publications, and Cole Quest, of Cole Quest and the City Pickers, on a tour through Woody’s Village streets!

Together, we’ll walk through four locations – each “Almanac House” – where Woody spent his time living, writing, and creating some of his most famous works. Cole will perform songs written at each location.

$30 – $40

The Village Trip Lecture: Clay Risen – Red Scare: Blacklists, McCarthyism, and the Making of Modern America

Jefferson Market Library 425 6th Avenue, NY, United States

In Red Scare, New York Times reporter Clay Risen unfolds the gripping story of the political hysteria that gripped America in the 1940s and '50s, an era that continues to reverberate today. In his lecture, Risen will describe how New York City, including the Village itself, became a centerpoint of anti-Communist witch hunting – and a surprising source of resistance. "Risen tells his story with a punch and an economy that are at times almost Hemingwayesque," wrote the New York Times

Free

Beatnik Greenwich Village, Walking Tour

Stumpdown Coffee Corner of West 8th & MacDougal Streets, New York, NY, United States

Straighten your shades Daddy-o, Marc Catapano’s walking tour goes right through the heart of Beatnik Greenwich Village. Visit the hottest spots, where the Beatniks made the scene and meet some of its hippest characters, like Jack Kerouac, Jackson Pollock, Lenny Bruce, and Diane DiPrima. Be there or be square!

$30 – $35

Looking East: Balinese Gamelan Ensemble Yowana Sari & Friends

St Mark’s in the Bowery 131 East 10th Street, New York, NY, United States

Gamelan Yowana Sari and guitarists Kyle Miller and Jack Lynch perform music by Michael Gordon, Evan Ziporyn, Kyle Miller, Vivian Fung, and I Gusde Widnyana. Gamelan Yowana Sari plays new music written for Balinese instruments. The group is comprised of students and professional musicians dedicated to the presentation of both traditional and new works for gamelan.

Free

Urban Garage: A Performance Lab for Young Musicians

The Bitter End 147 Bleecker Street, New York, NY, United States

Urban Garage is a performance lab for young musicians, aged 11-21, interested in genres of music not typically taught in schools - pop, rock, folk, blues, country etc. Through free, monthly open mics, guided jams and community service concerts, kids learn practical skills in musicianship and collaboration from seasoned professionals. This session will be led by founder/director Liz Queler and Seth Farber.

Free

Habitat East Village with Damien Sneed and Friends

St Mark’s in the Bowery 131 East 10th Street, New York, NY, United States

Jimmy Carter's first Habitat for Humanity project was in the East Village, off Tompkins Square Park. Carter had a love for music and musicians of every ilk and, as President, he brought many of them to the White House, from Leonard Bernstein and Dizzy Gillespie to the great pedagogical pioneer Shinichi Suzuki. He saw music as a healer and a bridge between diverse groups, and recognized excellence in all genres. Following the gamelan concert, join us inside the church as we revisit some of that music, with Damien Sneed, his jazz ensemble and gospel Chorale Le Chateau, violinist David Fulmer, soprano Sharon Harms and pianist Joan Forsyth performing favorites close to the President's heart.

$25 – $30

Bernstein Remix! A Benefit for Artful Learning

The Loft at City Winery 11th Avenue at 15th Street, New York, NY, United States

A unique mix of performing artists gather to reinterpret and reimagine the music and words of Leonard Bernstein. Curated by his daughter, author-narrator Jamie Bernstein, this intimate evening features a wide range of performers: from Broadway to jazz, from classical to Latin American – and beyond. NEWLY RELEASED TICKETS

$40 – $200

East Village Underground: Two Centuries of Creativity and Rebellion, Walking Tour

Ottendorfer Library 135 Second Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Join Marc Catapano and uncover the dynamic history of NYC's East Village and its famous underground movements. Explore its radical political past, its avant-garde art, and groundbreaking jazz, rock, and punk scenes. Visit iconic sites like CBGB’s, St Mark’s Place, and Tompkins Square Park, and revel in the area's extraordinary cultural legacy.

$30 – $35

Stand Up & Be Counted! The Village Trip Comedy Night

Greenwich Village Comedy Club 99 Macdougal Street, New York, NY, United States

A great night of comedy featuring some of the best popular and up-and-coming comic talents in the New York area.

$25

Howl: A Performance with Percussion and Cornet

Bowery Poetry Club 308 Bowery at Bleecker Street, New York, NY, United States

Come experience this new recitation and musical interpretation of Allen Ginsberg’s ground-breaking poetic masterpiece Howl, performed by Justin Jay Hines (percussion) with master jazz improviser Kirk Knuffke (cornet).

$20 – $25

Norman Raeben and Bob Dylan: A Lecture by Fabio Fantuzzi

The Renee & Chaim Gross Foundation 526 Laguardia Place, New York, NY, United States

Bob Dylan once said that Norman Raeben “put my mind and my hand and my eye together, in a way that allowed me to do consciously what I unconsciously felt… didn’t teach you so much how to draw … he looked into you and told you what you were.” From late March to August 1974, Dylan made the daily journey uptown to Raeben’s eleventh-floor studio above Carnegie Hall, developing a visual approach to writing that shaped seminal albums like Blood on the TracksDesire, and Street Legal. Reflecting on that creative period in a 1991 interview, Dylan added: “That was my painting period… that’s like taking a brush and painting those songs onto a canvas.”

$20

Poets of Patchin Place: Musical Settings of Village Poets

Salmagundi Club 47 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Djuna Barnes, artist, illustrator, journalist, and author, best known for Nightwood (1936), a classic of lesbian fiction, lived for 40 years on Patchin Place where her neighbors included ee cummings. The story goes that the poet would poke his head into the stairwell of the reclusive Djuna’s building and shout: “Are you alive, Djuna?” Barnes knew James Joyce when she was in Paris between the wars and he gifted her an annotated manuscript of Ulysses.

$25 – $30

The Italian Village, Walking Tour

Washington Square Arch at Fifth Avenue & Washington Square North NY, United States

Greenwich Village isn’t just about artists, writers, and Bohemians. For almost 150 years, a vibrant Italian-American community has existed on the neighborhood’s southern edge. Starting in Washington Square Park, Marc Catapano will explore the history and cultural legacy of the “Italian Village,” visiting such landmarks as Our Lady of Pompei and St Anthony of Padua, plus sites associated with the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Learn about notable Italian-American locals, such as Gregory Corso, poet and one of the youngest members of the Beat Generation; Diane DiPrima, poet and activist; and mobster Crazy Joey Gallo, "beatnik gangster" and the subject of a Bob Dylan song. And take a dive into the rich Italian culinary legacy, from coffee houses and pizzerias, to bakeries and grocers.

$30 – $35

The Cornelia Street Café in Exile: A Documentary (2025)

IFC Center 323 Sixth Avenue (at West 3rd St), New York, NY, United States

For 41 years, the Cornelia Street Café was a Village fixture, a great place to go, whether to relax with friends and a bottle of wine, or to write at a corner table, fueled by excellent coffee. Downstairs, on its diminutive stage, Suzanne Vega might be trying out a new song, Oliver Sacks presenting a science evening, Eve Ensler directing an early performance of The Vagina Monologues. David Amram played regular gigs in what he called “the Cornelia Street Stadium.”

$15 – $18

It’s Complicated: New York’s 400-year Relationship with its Waterfront

Pier 57, Daffodil Room 15th Street at Hudson River Park, New York, NY, United States

Presented by The Village Trip, this panel discussion examines New York's waterfront from a range of perspectives and is made possible through the support of DutchCultureUSA, a program of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the United States.

From its piers, canals, landfills, and seawalls, New York City has interacted in complex ways with its ever-changing waterfront. Now climate change and rising sea levels are forcing the city to address its water’s edge with new strategies and expensive plans for the future.

Free

Thunder in the Village: Dylan and The Making of a Musical Rebellion

Café Wha? 115 MacDougal St, New York, NY, United States

A celebration of the 1970s Greenwich Village folk scene and the fiftieth anniversary of the Rolling Thunder Revue. Curated by Rolling Stone senior journalist David Browne, author of Talkin' Greenwich Village, and Fabio Fantuzzi, co-editor of Bob Dylan and the Arts, the evening will feature musicians and special guests directly involved in the genesis of that visionary, freewheeling tour—shaped in Village venues as a liberating artistic circus that defied the constraints of the commercial music industry.

$20 – $30

Fight the Power! 15 Years of HOMOCATS

LGBTQ Center 208 W 13 Street, NY, United States

HOMOCATS and the Bureau of General Services—Queer Division are excited to present Fight the Power! 15 Years of HOMOCATS, an art exhibition celebrating 15 years of the HOMOCATS zine series. Morrison was inspired during Obama’s presidency to create a zine advocating for affordable health care, marriage equality, and equal rights. Paying homage to historic queer symbols such as the rainbow flag and pink triangle, Morrison’s work also engages pop art and pop culture with playfulness and humor.

Free

Poetica Musica: Inspired by the Village

St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United States

New York-based chamber group Poetica Musica presents a concert celebrating composers inspired by Greenwich Village and the East Village – among them Astor Piazzolla, George Gershwin, Charles Ives, Bela Bartok, and William Anderson. Featuring guitarists Oren Fader and William Anderson; flutist Barry Crawford; pianist Molly Morkoski; and soprano Eleanor Valkenburg, artistic director of Poetica Musica.

$15 – $20

ETHEL at the Met

Mezzanine at the Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, United States

As part of their regular residency at the Met, acclaimed string quartet ETHEL with guitarist Kyle Miller offer a preview performance of Miller’s Plea and A Minimum of Mountain, new works for electric guitar and string quartet commissioned by The Village Trip.

Free

The Original: A Chinese Bohemian in the Village, Walking Tour

Stonewall National Monument 38-64 Christopher Street, New York, NY, United States

The Original is an immersive walking tour through Greenwich Village with Michael Salgarolo following the strange, hilarious life of Chinese American author H T Tsiang. Alternatively ignored and ridiculed in his own time, Tsiang is now known as a visionary forebearer of modern Asian American literature. His two major novels, The Hanging on Union Square (1935) and And China Has Hands (1937) challenged mainstream representations of Chinese Americans and presented a deeply unhinged satire of the American Dream. The Original explores how the cafeterias, hand laundries, and radical arts scene of the Depression-era West Village inspired Tsiang’s writing and made him an “original.” 

$25 – $30

Sloan and the Ashcan School: The Art that Shook the World, Walking Tour

Washington Square Arch at Fifth Avenue & Washington Square North NY, United States

John French Sloan arrived in Greenwich Village in 1904 and joyfully proceeded to observe and record in oils the rollicking daily life of the neighborhood. Along with his painter friends, dubbed “The Ashcan School,” Sloan changed American art forever. Walk led by artist and historian Marc Kehoe.

$25 – $30

The 1960s and ‘70s Music of the West Village from Dylan and Springsteen to Woodstock and Beyond, Walking Tour

1 West 4th Street at the corner of Mercer and W 4th Street 1 West 4th Street, New York, NY, United States

Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, Simon & Garfunkel, Joni Mitchell, The Mamas & The Papas, Bruce Springsteen…. So many great careers were launched on the rickety stages of Greenwich Village. Join Ann McDermott for a trip “down the foggy ruins of time” to learn the real stories behind A Complete Unknown and the lives of Dylan, Pete Seeger and Joan Baez. Hear how The Woodstock Festival of Music and Art had its origins on Village streets.

$25 – $30